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2 — Tuesday, January 10, 2017
News
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

 
 

Department of Piano 
Faculty Recital

WHAT: UM piano faculty will 
perform classical pieces on the 
piano of Vladimir Horowitz.

WHO: School of Music, Theatre 
& Dance

WHEN: 7:30 p.m.

WHERE: Earl V. Moore Building, 
 

Britton Recital Hall

CAMPUS EVENTS & NOTES

Environmental 
Research Seminar

WHAT: The health effects of 
the 2008 northern California 
wildfires will be investigated 
using a spatiotemporal 
approach.

WHO: Center for Mildlife 
Science

WHEN: Noon to 1 p.m.

WHERE: Room 3755, School of 
Public Health Building 1

Native Gardens at Home

WHAT: Matthaei Botanical 
Gardens and Nichols Arboretum 
director and UM landscape 
architecture professor will 
explore the advantages of having 
native gardens at home.

WHO: Matthaei Botanical 
Gardens and Nichols Arboretum

WHEN: 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

WHERE: Matthaei Botanical 
Gardens

LSA Internship Forum

WHAT: Learn more about 
internship experiences, crafting 
cover letters and resumes and 
talk to career advisers.

WHO: University Career Center

WHEN: 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan League, 
Henderson Room

String Showcase

WHAT: SMTD string soloists and 
chamber music groups selected 
by faculty will perform in this 
monthly series.
WHO: School of Music, Theatre 
& Dance
WHEN: 3 p.m.

WHERE: Earl V. Moore Building, 
Britton Recital Hall

Startup Career Fair: 
Resumes and Interviews

WHAT: Recruiters working 
for startups and UM advisers 
will give advice on writing clear 
resumes and offer interview 
practice.

WHO: Innovate Blue

WHEN: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

WHERE: Duderstadt Center, 
Media Union

Depression, Anxiety and 
Time Management

WHAT: A Q&A presentation 
will focus on how to cope 
with challenges presented by 
depression, anxiety and mood 
swings.
WHO: Depression Center

WHEN: 5:30 to 7 p.m.

WHERE: Chrysler Center, Room 
265

Winter Fest 

WHAT: Find more and new 
student organizations to join 
this semester.

WHO: Center for Campus 
Involvement

WHEN: 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.

WHERE: Michigan Union

President-elect Donald 

Trump tweeted appreciation to 

Ford Motor Co. and Fiat Chrysler 

Automobiles on Jan. 9 following 

recent announcements by both 

companies to invest in U.S. 

plants.

During the Detroit Auto 

Show, Fiat Chrysler announced 

a $1 billion investment in its 

Warren, Mich. and Toledo, Ohio 

plants by 2020. Fiat Chrysler’s 

plans to make a Jeep pickup and 

resume production of the classic 

Wagoneer is expected to create 

2,000 jobs.

Sergio Marchionne, CEO 

of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, 

warned the company would have 

to close plants if Trump imposed 

a tariff on imports from Mexico.

Ford announced earlier in 

January its plan to expand its 

Flat Rock plant, investing $700 

million and hiring 700 new 

hourly workers to build self-

driving and electric vehicles. 

The plant currently produces 

the Mustang and Lincoln 

Continental. Ford also canceled 

plans to build a $1.6 billion plant 

in San Luis Potosi, 

Mexico.

Trump retweeted 

an article following the 

announcement, which 

indicated the president-

elect’s influence on the 

decision.

Trump won 

Michigan, an 

auto industry 

hub, in November 

with promises to 

revive American 

manufacturing. Earlier 

in his campaign, he 

threatened to impose 

tariffs on cars made 

in Mexico by General 

Motors and repeatedly 

criticized Ford for their 

plants in Mexico.

He expressed gratitude 

to Ford and Fiat Chrysler in a 

tweet, noting his appreciation 

for their 

investment in Michigan 

specifically.

ON THE DAILY: TRUMP TWEETS PRAISE FORD AND CHRYSLER

EMMA RICHTER/Daily

Trump supporters gather at a rally in Grand Rapids, MI in November 2016.

SUPPORTE R S

Tweets

UMich Catholics
@UmichCatholics

Every flight of Mason Hall 
stairs = 45 minutes of 
uniterrupted nap time no 
arguments

Follow @michigandaily

umich ARTS & CULTURE
@umichARTS

GOLDEN GLOBES: Congrats 
to #umich alums 
@pasekandpaul, who won 
Best Original Song for 
@LaLaLand’s “City of Stars”

Keelin Kraemer
@keelinkraemer

Sylly week won

Tom Horsman
@TomHorsman

It’s ironic that the Ohio flag 
was designed by a graduate 
of @UMich.

The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the 
University OF Michigan. One copy is available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the Daily’s office 
for $2. Subscriptions for September-April are $225 and year long subscriptions are $250. University affiliates are subject to a 
reduced subscription rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a 
member of The Associated Press and The Associated Collegiate Press.

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the city explore alternative 
and experimental methods of 
solution.

“One of the concerns that 

was brought up by a number 
of different individuals and 
groups was the city’s lack of 
implementing any non-lethal 
methods,” Frenzel said. “There 
were some groups in town that 
were interesting in pursuing 
that option and this is an attempt 
to go down that road to see if it is 
a workable situation here.”

The cull was highly unpopular 

among many citizens and some 
members of City Council when 
it was first introduced in the 
Fall of 2015. Many Ann Arbor 
citizens expressed concern over 
residents’ safety and the moral 
considerations of implementing 
a cull in the city. However, the 
cull was approved 8-1 by the 
City Council, and a majority of 
residents surveyed were in favor 
of it.

The 
culling 
phase 
also 

received an update, taking last 
year’s data on neighborhood 

safety and deer presence into 
consideration.

Frenzel said updates include 

the shortening of the culling 
period, 
which 
was 
reduced 

from roughly two months to 
two weeks from January 30 
to February 13 from 3 p.m. to 
midnight. The number of parks 
where lethal shooting will take 
place is also reduced because of 
the non-lethal initiative.

“There’s a little bit of shifting 

around of parks,” Frenzel said. 
“(Last year) some of the parks 
were simply too small, some of 
the parks contiguous with other 
parks so it was confusing … and 
there were a couple of locations 
that were used heavily for 
children’s routes to school and 
those were removed.”

There are 10 areas throughout 

the city that will be closed 
during the cull program. Three 
University of Michigan property 
areas will also be closed from 
Jan. 30 to Feb. 2 from 3 p.m. to 
midnight, including the Nichols 
Arboretum.

Tanya Hilgendorf, CEO of 

the Humane Society of Huron 
Valley, who is opposed to the 
deer 
management 
program, 

expressed 
her 
displeasure 

at 
this 
dual 
sterilization-

culling approach. She argued 
that 
the 
city’s 
claim 
of 

deer 
overpopulation 
is 
not 

scientifically valid and is instead 
motivated by residents wanting 
to protect the pristine condition 
of their backyards.

“(We) do not think a mixed 

approach of killing and sterilizing 
makes sense philosophically or 
scientifically,” Hilgendorf wrote 
in an email interview with the 
Daily. “If we don’t think it is 
okay to use gun violence to try to 
solve problems between people 
then we shouldn’t use gun 
violence against wildlife in our 
community parks.”

Hilgendorf 
criticized 
the 

University for opening its land 
up to sharpshooters, arguing 
that it is selfish for the University 
to create a haven for deer and 
then remove them when they 
become a nuisance.

“The UM called the Arb a 

‘living laboratory’ – shouldn’t a 
living laboratory embrace life?” 
Hilgendorf wrote. “We planted 
the tasty plants that deer love 
to eat. We essentially invited 
them to dinner and then became 

outraged when they took up 
our offer. Now they are being 
shot 
and 
going 
through 

surgery just to appease those 
looking for easy answers.”

One 
of 
the 
concerns 

detailed in last year’s deer 
management report was the 
need for better enforcing 
park closing during culling 
hours and a small number 
of anti-cull activists who 
spread 
misinformation 

to create “alarm” among 
residents.

Mayor Christopher Taylor 

(D) said he does not believe 
a misinformation campaign 
is going on, but rather that 
residents are interpreting 
information in a different 
way.

“Whatever 
happened 

last year, I have no reason 
to 
believe 
that 
there’ll 

be 
people 
spreading 

misinformation this year,” 
Taylor said. “People get their 
information from a variety 
of ways. I have no reason to 
think that it’s an intentional 
campaign.”

DEER
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